08-20-2010 03:08 PM - edited 07-03-2021 07:06 PM
I have a mix of eight 1522's and 1524SB's deployed outdoors across an apartment complex. Of the eight, three are RAP's wired back into the network. Is there any advantage to having them in a single Bridge Group Name at all? Do they play better with each other while in a single BGN? There are no other mesh networks in the area...
On code 6.0.196 currently.
Thanks,
Adam
Solved! Go to Solution.
08-20-2010 03:57 PM
BGN is so you can get a logical breakout. For example if RAP1 points North, RAP2 points East and RAP3 Points West, you could use a different
BGN for each sector. This allows you to kind of push the MAP in the direction you want it to take to get to the RAP. It should also lessen the amount of neighbors that are viable as a path back, so this should also help to lower covergance time when you bring the MESH up.
08-20-2010 03:57 PM
BGN is so you can get a logical breakout. For example if RAP1 points North, RAP2 points East and RAP3 Points West, you could use a different
BGN for each sector. This allows you to kind of push the MAP in the direction you want it to take to get to the RAP. It should also lessen the amount of neighbors that are viable as a path back, so this should also help to lower covergance time when you bring the MESH up.
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